Belgian Politics & Elections: Federal, regional & EP elections on June 9, 2024
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Poll
Question: Do you think Chez Nous will get seats?
#1
No, they won't get even 2,5% in Wallonia and Brussels  (what would happen accoding to recent polls)
 
#2
No, but they will get votes in the 2,5%-4,99% rango in Wallonia and/or Brussels
 
#3
No. They will pass the 5% threshold in Wallonia and/or Brussels, but somehow they won't get seats.
 
#4
Yes, they will get 1-2 seats
 
#5
Yes, they will get more than 2 seats
 
Show Pie Chart
Partisan results

Total Voters: 16

Author Topic: Belgian Politics & Elections: Federal, regional & EP elections on June 9, 2024  (Read 137085 times)
Zinneke
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« Reply #550 on: December 09, 2019, 12:19:39 PM »

So Magnette handed in his resignation (technically he asks the King to not nominate him again) as Informateur which means that the door is still open for Purple-Green, but less open as previously thought about a week ago. Its clear both N-VA and CD&V are desperate to attack VLD on trying to sell out to the francophone left, but at the same time Purple-Green appears to be the only real solution (We could have told you this even before the election of course), because the Spanish experience has put a lot of people off the idea of fresh elections, and clearly N-VA-PS is not compatible. 
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Zinneke
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« Reply #551 on: December 13, 2019, 02:17:28 PM »



New polls show VB taking over NVA
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LAKISYLVANIA
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« Reply #552 on: December 13, 2019, 07:36:28 PM »

And shows PVDA growing and becoming as big as the social democrats and the liberals.
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« Reply #553 on: December 14, 2019, 09:39:20 AM »



Virtually 19 seats for marxists.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #554 on: December 14, 2019, 10:00:31 AM »

Yes, what this country needs right now more than ever is testimonial parties blocking any chance of governments being formed...I guess that's a one way ticket to breaking our record Laki, but not to improving living poor, handicapped, and workers conditions, other than to bring the PS further to the left thus ruling out any federal majority.

For Marxists, PVDA-PTB voters sure do like the status quo.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #555 on: December 16, 2019, 03:18:55 PM »

So the thing that always interests foreign observers...scission of Belgium...

From Le Soir/ipsos/RTL :

Are you in favour of a referendum on a split of Belgium given there is no government for a year :

Belgium (as a whole) :
40% pro-referendum
50% against referendum
10% uninterested/undecided

Flanders
43% pro-ref
47% against
10% uninterested/undecided

Brussels
33% pro-ref
58% against
9% uninterested/undecided

Wallonia
35% pro-ref
55% against
10%  uninterested/undecided

How they would vote in the referendum :

Belgium
28% for the split
60% against the split
12% non voters

Flanders :
37% for the split of Belgium
50% against the split of Belgium
13% non voters

Brussels
17% for the split
72% against
11% non voters


Wallonia
14% for the split
76% against
10% undecided.


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Former President tack50
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« Reply #556 on: December 19, 2019, 05:20:15 AM »

Yes, what this country needs right now more than ever is testimonial parties blocking any chance of governments being formed...I guess that's a one way ticket to breaking our record Laki, but not to improving living poor, handicapped, and workers conditions, other than to bring the PS further to the left thus ruling out any federal majority.

For Marxists, PVDA-PTB voters sure do like the status quo.

Honestly the fact that Belgium can't form a government is a problem of Belgian politicians (same here to be honest).

Hypothetically Belgium could also get some sort of electoral system that is majoritarian in nature, like say a 2 round system like France, FPTP like the UK or even a majority bonus like Greece (probably split on sectarian lines).

Then again IMO the biggest problem in Belgium is the fact that the parties are split on sectarian lines (except PTB/PvdA). Government formation might be easier if the results looked like this instead

Socialist Party: 29
Liberal Party: 26
N-VA: 25
Green Party: 21
VB: 18
Christian Democratic Party: 17
PvdA-PTB: 12
DeFI: 2

Then again I will admit even with this it is hard to form a stable government. A Socialist-Liberal-Green government does have a majority though, so why hasn't it been done? It would also cut a 6 party coalition into only 3 parties.

Sidenote: Why does Belgium not have repeat elections like Spain or Israel in cases of deadlock? Maybe a new election would get things unstuck.
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LAKISYLVANIA
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« Reply #557 on: December 21, 2019, 06:15:10 AM »

It's not how it works, but I think new elections would be better. The problem is that new elections won't solve the problem. According to polls, the situation would only get worse, as PVDA and VB will never enter federal government. (regional government is a possibility for the future). But i'm hoping for new elections because my political party will likely grow. It also shows that there is still a vacuum left for a populist center party which could siphon votes from N-VA, VB and PVDA i think if it's pro-environment and anti-immigration (although done correctly and reasonable), while VB's proposals are outright racist and filled with real fascists like Dries Van Langenhove.

I spoke with a friend about politics. He called the s.pa chairman a whipster only chosen to appeal to people like him, which surely won't happen, he said. He voted Green-PVDA and will likely vote for them again.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #558 on: December 21, 2019, 01:08:28 PM »

Yes, what this country needs right now more than ever is testimonial parties blocking any chance of governments being formed...I guess that's a one way ticket to breaking our record Laki, but not to improving living poor, handicapped, and workers conditions, other than to bring the PS further to the left thus ruling out any federal majority.

For Marxists, PVDA-PTB voters sure do like the status quo.

Honestly the fact that Belgium can't form a government is a problem of Belgian politicians (same here to be honest).

In my opinion, its the fault of the testimonial parties because NVA and PS simply have no room to manoeuvre now that VB and PTB are breathing down their neck respectively. Their voters (the ones who are well off, I'm not talking about Laki or poorer VB voters who I sympathize with) are often voting that way to signal to those two parties to stop compromising. What does that achieve?! It's just plain political arson. I'd like these parties and their antipolitical voters to get their hands dirty, because other than student frat parties I don't think these people can organise anything. but then with VB especially basic human rights are at risk so I'd rather thus they get their hands dirty elsewhere than my country. Like Antarctica or something.


Quote
Hypothetically Belgium could also get some sort of electoral system that is majoritarian in nature, like say a 2 round system like France, FPTP like the UK or even a majority bonus like Greece (probably split on sectarian lines).

No because our entire societal model (loosely similar to the Dutch one) is based on consociational politics. It creates "Belgian compromises " but the whole point is that there is an entire caste of mandate holders, politicians, civil servants, labour aristocrats, big bosses claiming to speak on behalf of the entire bourgeois class, and civil society orgs that all profit from this system. They'll never let it break with majoritarianism.

Quote
Then again IMO the biggest problem in Belgium is the fact that the parties are split on sectarian lines (except PTB/PvdA). Government formation might be easier if the results looked like this instead

Socialist Party: 29
Liberal Party: 26
N-VA: 25
Green Party: 21
VB: 18
Christian Democratic Party: 17
PvdA-PTB: 12
DeFI: 2

Then again I will admit even with this it is hard to form a stable government. A Socialist-Liberal-Green government does have a majority though, so why hasn't it been done? It would also cut a 6 party coalition into only 3 parties.

Reality is that these 3 families actually do cooperate a lot now, but for practical purposes. For example, MR-VLD thought about merging their federal parliamentary group so they could overtake ECOLO-Groen and thus get more presidencies of committees.

The idea of them campaigning together makes no sense as long as the constituencies exist for federal elections. The federal unified electoral district is something touted by a lot of people (including NVA) but it puts into question the idea of francophone minority rights...it gives a lot more power to the Flemish electorate for federal matters. I'm in favour of it because Brussels is electorally speaking unrepresented.

Quote
Sidenote: Why does Belgium not have repeat elections like Spain or Israel in cases of deadlock? Maybe a new election would get things unstuck.

Recently there was talk of emulating Spain and then Vox happened and...yeah...although we don't have the issue of turnout.

It's also because we have fixed term regional parliaments, meaning that federal politics being significantly changed and out of sync with regional elections it might be detrimental (I don't buy it but whatever - I think there is some argument that having a midterm is detrimental though, like in the US).

and there is still an unwritten rule in Belgian politics that "the voter's will must be respected". The problem is we have never been so polarised as this current federal parliament.

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windjammer
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« Reply #559 on: December 21, 2019, 04:21:17 PM »

Who is more supportive of independence? The youth or the old?
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Zinneke
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« Reply #560 on: December 30, 2019, 07:02:22 AM »

Who is more supportive of independence? The youth or the old?

Youth (although I'm using VB as a proxy)

In Wallonia rattachists are very old.
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windjammer
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« Reply #561 on: December 30, 2019, 05:40:13 PM »

Who is more supportive of independence? The youth or the old?

Youth (although I'm using VB as a proxy)

In Wallonia rattachists are very old.
I mean, let's be honest. In the case of Belgium exploding, Wallonia will certainly not want initially to join France. But that would be still inevitable in the end as this region can't be objectively economically independent and the french constitution allows giving massive autonomy to some region.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #562 on: December 31, 2019, 05:41:08 AM »

Who is more supportive of independence? The youth or the old?

Youth (although I'm using VB as a proxy)

In Wallonia rattachists are very old.
I mean, let's be honest. In the case of Belgium exploding, Wallonia will certainly not want initially to join France. But that would be still inevitable in the end as this region can't be objectively economically independent and the french constitution allows giving massive autonomy to some region.

You realise there is a microstate on Wallonia's border that is pretty successful right? I think in the current EU set up it's not impossible for Wallonia to be an independent state. They would initially have a 20% budget reduction in case of a split but they'd probably negotiate some insane debt split in their favour with Flanders that compensates that.

Anyway I already explained elsewhere why it would even make more sense for Wallonia to join Germany more than France. But then again I don't know how Walloons would react politically to scission.
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windjammer
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« Reply #563 on: December 31, 2019, 06:55:21 AM »

Who is more supportive of independence? The youth or the old?

Youth (although I'm using VB as a proxy)

In Wallonia rattachists are very old.
I mean, let's be honest. In the case of Belgium exploding, Wallonia will certainly not want initially to join France. But that would be still inevitable in the end as this region can't be objectively economically independent and the french constitution allows giving massive autonomy to some region.

You realise there is a microstate on Wallonia's border that is pretty successful right? I think in the current EU set up it's not impossible for Wallonia to be an independent state. They would initially have a 20% budget reduction in case of a split but they'd probably negotiate some insane debt split in their favour with Flanders that compensates that.

Anyway I already explained elsewhere why it would even make more sense for Wallonia to join Germany more than France. But then again I don't know how Walloons would react politically to scission.
Well I think your comment bolded sums up quite my view that Wallonia couldn't remain alone and would have to join France, Germany or an another country.

And as for Luxembourg, this is way different than Wallonia.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #564 on: January 01, 2020, 08:07:07 AM »

Who is more supportive of independence? The youth or the old?

Youth (although I'm using VB as a proxy)

In Wallonia rattachists are very old.
I mean, let's be honest. In the case of Belgium exploding, Wallonia will certainly not want initially to join France. But that would be still inevitable in the end as this region can't be objectively economically independent and the french constitution allows giving massive autonomy to some region.

You realise there is a microstate on Wallonia's border that is pretty successful right? I think in the current EU set up it's not impossible for Wallonia to be an independent state. They would initially have a 20% budget reduction in case of a split but they'd probably negotiate some insane debt split in their favour with Flanders that compensates that.

Anyway I already explained elsewhere why it would even make more sense for Wallonia to join Germany more than France. But then again I don't know how Walloons would react politically to scission.
Well I think your comment bolded sums up quite my view that Wallonia couldn't remain alone and would have to join France, Germany or an another country.

And as for Luxembourg, this is way different than Wallonia.

yes but when you consider that half of the Belgian taxpayers money goes towards servicing debt then the debt relief Wallonia would almost certainly negotiate itself out of (being the unwilling party in the partition) would alleviate short term fears. The debt is arguably a bigger obstacle for Flemish nationalism than Brussels.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #565 on: January 10, 2020, 11:17:51 AM »
« Edited: January 18, 2020, 07:00:38 AM by Zinneke »

Bouchez-Coens as informateurs have released a more centre-right nota and have indicated that they prefer to let the NVA back in than work on their Vivaldi coalition (tripartite + Greens). The FGTB has already called PS and ECOLO to reject another 5 years of NVA.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #566 on: January 18, 2020, 07:00:07 AM »
« Edited: January 18, 2020, 07:53:14 AM by Zinneke »

Emir Kir, the Mayor of St Josse and federal parliamentarian, has been expelled from the PS for meeting with the Turkish far right in his commune (that is a large Turkish community with, er, strong links to You Know Who). This means the PS favored coalition of Purple+ is even more out of the window, now needing minor party support, but also that we will likely see Kir, who was mayor for several decades there, set up his own personalist pro-Turk party in Brussels, similar to Denk.  
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LAKISYLVANIA
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« Reply #567 on: January 18, 2020, 10:15:37 AM »

Emir Kir, the Mayor of St Josse and federal parliamentarian, has been expelled from the PS for meeting with the Turkish far right in his commune (that is a large Turkish community with, er, strong links to You Know Who). This means the PS favored coalition of Purple+ is even more out of the window, now needing minor party support, but also that we will likely see Kir, who was mayor for several decades there, set up his own personalist pro-Turk party in Brussels, similar to Denk.  
Yes, i just read about it. It's good that this happens. Strong condemnation of meeting with the far-right, and i don't care about a pro-Turk party, and yes it will be succesful, but it's again proof of "failed immigration". Such people have no place in our politics.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #568 on: January 18, 2020, 11:29:27 AM »

Emir Kir, the Mayor of St Josse and federal parliamentarian, has been expelled from the PS for meeting with the Turkish far right in his commune (that is a large Turkish community with, er, strong links to You Know Who). This means the PS favored coalition of Purple+ is even more out of the window, now needing minor party support, but also that we will likely see Kir, who was mayor for several decades there, set up his own personalist pro-Turk party in Brussels, similar to Denk.  
Yes, i just read about it. It's good that this happens. Strong condemnation of meeting with the far-right, and i don't care about a pro-Turk party, and yes it will be succesful, but it's again proof of "failed immigration". Such people have no place in our politics.

Kir is the worst kind of political opportunist. His ignorant fanboys though are just brainwashed. They are sometimes second or third generation immigrants who are considered backwards and foreign to actual Turks but that Erdogan maintained a relationship with (just like Morocco did with the Berbers who they treated like absolute cow dung until they "exported" them here). These guys are Belgians and our responsibility. It's our education and public services that drove them into the hands of Turkish nationalists. Our politicians, left and right, that instrumentalise serious foreign policy issues like the Armenian Genocide and Israel-Palestine to dog whistle certain communities to mobilise for them. And of course the PS is still a mostly white, very Belgian party that allows this kind of bizarre thing to happen in plain sight in their Brussels wing. And of course the Vlaams Belang flyers essentially calling you surplus to requirements in the country you were born in too does not help either.

Tldr This isn't a failure of immigration. It's a failure of education.

Anyway St Josse is gentrifying so quickly I don't expect it to remain Kir's fief for long. The EU youth there though need to get off their arse and vote rather than sticking their head in the sand only to occasionally pop outcomplaining that Brussels in ineffecient , etc
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LAKISYLVANIA
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« Reply #569 on: January 18, 2020, 12:39:20 PM »

Emir Kir, the Mayor of St Josse and federal parliamentarian, has been expelled from the PS for meeting with the Turkish far right in his commune (that is a large Turkish community with, er, strong links to You Know Who). This means the PS favored coalition of Purple+ is even more out of the window, now needing minor party support, but also that we will likely see Kir, who was mayor for several decades there, set up his own personalist pro-Turk party in Brussels, similar to Denk.  
Yes, i just read about it. It's good that this happens. Strong condemnation of meeting with the far-right, and i don't care about a pro-Turk party, and yes it will be succesful, but it's again proof of "failed immigration". Such people have no place in our politics.

Kir is the worst kind of political opportunist. His ignorant fanboys though are just brainwashed. They are sometimes second or third generation immigrants who are considered backwards and foreign to actual Turks but that Erdogan maintained a relationship with (just like Morocco did with the Berbers who they treated like absolute cow dung until they "exported" them here). These guys are Belgians and our responsibility. It's our education and public services that drove them into the hands of Turkish nationalists. Our politicians, left and right, that instrumentalise serious foreign policy issues like the Armenian Genocide and Israel-Palestine to dog whistle certain communities to mobilise for them. And of course the PS is still a mostly white, very Belgian party that allows this kind of bizarre thing to happen in plain sight in their Brussels wing. And of course the Vlaams Belang flyers essentially calling you surplus to requirements in the country you were born in too does not help either.

Tldr This isn't a failure of immigration. It's a failure of education.

Anyway St Josse is gentrifying so quickly I don't expect it to remain Kir's fief for long. The EU youth there though need to get off their arse and vote rather than sticking their head in the sand only to occasionally pop outcomplaining that Brussels in ineffecient , etc

The failed immigration is our responsibility, but it's still an example of failed integration into our country. That's why i'm in favour of focusing on integrating 2nd and 3rd gen immigrants instead of importing a lot of new ones, not meaning we shouldn't take in refugees, but we should on long-term focus on sending them back to redevelop and rebuild their country. Now is the time to focus on people who are here, who are left out of our society.

Our education is good, among the best in the world. First focus should be on learning both languages of the country and making sure they speak dutch or french at home, and especially in class, at school and during recess on schools. A requirement to integrate well into our country is that they speak very well one of our languages, the language that's being spoken at their school.

PS is using immigrants for electoral purposes. They should criticize what's not done very well. Molenbeek is the perfect example of this. The mayor should have taken actions a long time ago, and he didn't for electoral purposes. That's what annoys me, and a lot of left-wing parties do that.
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LAKISYLVANIA
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« Reply #570 on: January 28, 2020, 10:39:32 AM »

PS has said they're not interested to form a government with N-VA. Today Bouchez-Coens will resign, and De Wever or De Wever-Magnette will be appointed. There is again discussion about refederalization or confederalization of the country. We have currently no government for 248 days. No-one wants new elections and we need a majority in federal parliament for that. It's a possibility there will be no federal government until 2024 (1800 days without a government)
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Zinneke
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« Reply #571 on: January 28, 2020, 06:08:31 PM »

PS has said they're not interested to form a government with N-VA. Today Bouchez-Coens will resign, and De Wever or De Wever-Magnette will be appointed. There is again discussion about refederalization or confederalization of the country. We have currently no government for 248 days. No-one wants new elections and we need a majority in federal parliament for that. It's a possibility there will be no federal government until 2024 (1800 days without a government)

Bouchez and Coens have been renewed. Bouchez wanted Rousseau (the leader of the 5th largest party in Flanders) to become an informateur but thats out of the question. Its clear De Wever has no choice but to follow whatever VB voters want him to do so delay and delay.

I think we will get new elections. I can't see any other way out of this. Its really time the Flemish nationalists and the people who vote for parties on the federal level with no interest in compromise especially (thinking of VB, PTB/PVDA here) have their cake an eat it.
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« Reply #572 on: January 29, 2020, 06:48:38 AM »

PS has said they're not interested to form a government with N-VA. Today Bouchez-Coens will resign, and De Wever or De Wever-Magnette will be appointed. There is again discussion about refederalization or confederalization of the country. We have currently no government for 248 days. No-one wants new elections and we need a majority in federal parliament for that. It's a possibility there will be no federal government until 2024 (1800 days without a government)

Bouchez and Coens have been renewed. Bouchez wanted Rousseau (the leader of the 5th largest party in Flanders) to become an informateur but thats out of the question. Its clear De Wever has no choice but to follow whatever VB voters want him to do so delay and delay.

I think we will get new elections. I can't see any other way out of this. Its really time the Flemish nationalists and the people who vote for parties on the federal level with no interest in compromise especially (thinking of VB, PTB/PVDA here) have their cake an eat it.
I disagree. Compromising is okay, but abandoning all your ideals and whatever you fight for, is not done. N-VA has no interest to compromise. Their proposal to PS was simply not done. PS would lose everything and gain nothing. We need elections, but I doubt they will bring new solutions, as polling indicates that VB and PVDA-PTB would continue to grow.
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« Reply #573 on: January 31, 2020, 01:37:58 PM »

Coens and Bouchez resigned now. Geens is currently at the Royal Palace, assumingly being asked by the King if he would be willing to join a Vivaldi coalition after they've said they're tied with N-VA.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #574 on: February 15, 2020, 06:34:54 AM »
« Edited: February 15, 2020, 06:54:54 AM by Zinneke »

Geens has resigned as informateur. He was hoping to bring the PS and N-VA together but Magnette made it clear this morning it wasn't going to happen and the N-VA continue their own Calimero act of "We're willing to negotiate, but only on our terms".

King must give it to an NVA official if only for symbolic reasons now. A real sense that new elections are the only thing that will happen.

Magnette also talked about a potential referendum for the first time, which is a Rubicon for Francophone politicians, that personally I am glad they have finally crossed.
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